April 26, 2016
Journal Article

Implementing and Evaluating Variable Soil Thickness in the Community Land Model, Version 4.5 (CLM4.5)

Abstract

One of the recognized weaknesses of land surface models as used in weather and climate models is the assumption of constant soil thickness due to the lack of global estimates of bedrock depth. Using a 30 arcsecond global dataset for the thickness of relatively porous, unconsolidated sediments over bedrock, spatial variation in soil thickness is included here in version 4.5 of the Community Land Model (CLM4.5). The number of soil layers for each grid cell is determined from the average soil depth for each 0.9? latitude ? 1.25? longitude grid cell. Including variable soil thickness affects the simulations most in regions with shallow bedrock corresponding predominantly to areas of mountainous terrain. The greatest changes are to baseflow, with the annual minimum generally occurring earlier, while smaller changes are seen in surface fluxes like latent heat flux and surface runoff in which only the annual cycle amplitude is increased. These changes are tied to soil moisture changes which are most substantial in locations with shallow bedrock. Total water storage (TWS) anomalies do not change much over most river basins around the globe, since most basins contain mostly deep soils. However, it was found that TWS anomalies substantially differ for a river basin with more mountainous terrain. Additionally, the annual cycle in soil temperature are affected by including realistic soil thicknesses due to changes to heat capacity and thermal conductivity.

Revised: September 27, 2016 | Published: April 26, 2016

Citation

Brunke M., P. Broxton, J. Pelletier, D. Gochis, P. Hazenberg, D.M. Lawrence, and L. Leung, et al. 2016. Implementing and Evaluating Variable Soil Thickness in the Community Land Model, Version 4.5 (CLM4.5). Journal of Climate 29, no. 9:3441-3461. PNNL-SA-109797. doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0307.1